birth, death, rebirth.......
birth, death, rebirth.......
"Space and time become 'defined' as 'God' ventures in Self-exploration, expansion, creative experimentation, desiring expression to unfold the inherent potentials within the tension-flux of his own Being."
Do you mean God both creates and destroys life in self-expression?
--Dave
In the phenomenal realm of Nature, is it not evident that life-forms are born, live and die, undergoing a continual transformation? Such is the nature of the world of impermanence, ...at least in the phenomenal aspect, of that which is subject to growth, evolution, modification, change. In a limited sense, the creation is as the physical habitat of 'God', however finitely circumscribed or imperfect, hence the temporal nature of such. -
the universe is non-static.
We see this typified in the
Trimurti = Brahma (creator), Vishnu (preserver), Shiva (destroyer/transformer)....depicting a 'trinity' of Deity-expression present
in the conditional realm of existence, the material space-time continuum. So, at least in this realm of change(manifest existence), there is
birth, death, rebirth...creative movement being '
cyclic'.
We note this is all in the
conditional realms of existence, the elemental world of Nature. There is that aspect of Brahman that is unconditional, unborn, undying, unchanging, prior to space, before time, eternally infinite...that is even beyond the relative terms of 'life' or 'death', the Original Reality that just IS, from which and within which all conditions arise, as modifications or transformations of
itself, since Brahman is the invisible reality behind all appearances (the only One existing) - there is no other 'presence' from wherein all potentials and actuals originate (space and time is naturally involved in the movement and sequence of such).
We note that in this context of 'conditional' existence....that 'Brahman' manifests as
Ishvara', the Lord of creation, who consonant with the Trimurti....oversees the entire
continuum of creation, from its emergence, maintenance and de-struction, and in every 're-birth' of creation. Ishvara remains within this context of 'space-time' as the supreme Lord, governing the movements therein as a manifestation of Brahman, however personified.
This aspect of 'Brahman' is 'God' engaged with creation as creation is born and maintained by 'God' as no other source or maintainer exists. So 'life' and 'death' are only relative features of the cosmic-continuum. Whatever is 'eternal life' or 'immortality'
is the nature of 'God' itself, which is
incorruptible, and so that life-essence and consciousness is what is eternal, however it continues in whatever form.
pj